CONCEPT
Pedagogical Judgment
The teacher's improvisational exercise of moral and cognitive discernment — deciding what to reveal, when, to whom — that AI optimization for helpfulness cannot replicate.
Pedagogical judgment is the situated, improvisational capacity to make moment-by-moment decisions about what a particular student needs for her development in a particular moment. It is not the application of rules or the execution of lesson plans but the exercise of practical wisdom in conditions of uncertainty, requiring the teacher to know the student well enough to distinguish what the student wants from what the student needs, and to possess the moral courage to withhold the former in service of the latter. Pedagogical judgment is what makes teaching an irreducibly human practice: the two-second pause before answering a student's question, during which the teacher calculates whether to provide information, ask a counter-question, redirect the inquiry, or remain silent. AI cannot perform this judgment because AI optimizes for the user's stated request rather than her unstated developmental needs, and because the judgment requires moral engagement — care for the student's long-term growth that may conflict with short-term satisfaction — that no optimization function can encode.
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